Welcome to myLot!

existing user?

username
password
forgot your password?
 
 

new user?

desired name
 
Your myLot URL will be:
http://myLot.com/desiredname
 

popular interests

 
  play in the rain
31 seconds ago
 
  life
5 minutes ago
 
  friend
6 minutes ago
 
  weight loss
7 minutes ago
 
  make extra money
10 minutes ago
 
  my father
10 minutes ago
 
  make extra money
12 minutes ago
 
  single
13 minutes ago
 
  relationships
17 minutes ago
 
  cell phone
17 minutes ago
 
  internet
18 minutes ago
 
  watching movies
20 minutes ago
 
myLot population
135,415
  users by location
  top referrers
  users by rating
homeinterestsdiscussionsblogsnewsmessages friendsphotosearningsmyLot
web | myLot | discussions | blogs | news | photos

sponsors
Free Wind Generator
Choose From Sunforce, Windpower,& Rutland. Details Apply.
helpful-homesite.com

Wind Energy Services and
Power industry specialists. Improve performance and optimize with us.
www.sterling-energy.com

Save On Electric Bills
Harness The Wind And Use It To Power Your Home Or Office.
winds-energies.com

Use of wind energy expected to grow dramatically email this discussion to a friend?

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Associated Press Writer
 
2 months ago

WASHINGTON (AP) - Two decades from now Americans could get as much electricity from windmills as from nuclear power plants, according to a government report that lays out a possible plan for wind energy growth.


The report, a collaboration between the Energy Department research labs and industry, concludes wind energy could generate 20 percent of the nation's electricity by 2030, about the same share now produced by nuclear reactors.


Such growth would pose a number of major challenges, but is achievable without the need of major new technological breakthroughs, said the report released Monday.


"The report indicates that we can do this nationally for less than half a cent per kilowatt hour if we have the vision," said Andrew Karsner, the Energy Department's assistant secretary for efficiency and renewable energy.


If achieved, it would be an astounding leap.


Wind energy today accounts for only about 1 percent of the nation's electricity, although the industry has been on a growth binge with a 45 percent jump in production last year.


To reach the 20 percent production level, wind turbines would have to produce 300,000 megawatts of power, compared to about 16,000 megawatts generated today. Such growth would envision more than 75,000 new wind turbines, many of them larger than those operating today. About 54,000 megawatts would be produced by turbines in offshore waters.


And it would require a major expansion of the electricity grid system to move power from high-wind areas to other parts of the country, the report said.


"The United States possesses abundant wind resources," said the report spearheaded by DOE's National Renewable Technology Laboratory in Golden, Colo., and a 20 percent share of electricity production "while ambitious, could be feasible."


But the report cautioned that its findings were not meant to predict that such growth would, in fact, be achieved, but only that it is technically possible. And it acknowledged "there are significant costs, challenges and impacts" associated with such rapid growth.


It would require improved turbine technology, "significant changes" and expansion of power line systems and a major expansion of markets for wind energy to accommodate an annual growth rate of 16,000 megawatts of electricity a year beginning in 2018, more than five times today's annual growth.


Randall Swisher, executive director of the American Wind Energy Association, said the report confirms that wind energy "is no longer a niche" in the power industry.


Dan Arvizu, director of the department's National Renewable Energy Laboratory, said that the 18-month study provides a "vision" of the kind of wind energy growth technically possible.


"First of all, it's doable, second of all it's desirable," said Arvizu at a news conference.


"It's time for America to change the way we think about wind power," said Bob Lukefahr of BP Alternative Energy North America. The oil company is a leading wind developer, said Lukefahr.


If wind energy's share of power production grows to 20 percent, natural gas consumption is expected to decline by 11 percent and coal consumption by 18 percent in 2030, said the report. As a result carbon dioxide emissions linked to global warming would be reduced by 825 million metric tons a year.


"This is the equivalent of taking 140 million cars off the road," said Swisher.


 

On the Net:

Department of Energy _ http://www.doe.gov

sponsors
wind energy
Reduce Your Electric Consumption& Utility Costs. Call for Info.
www.greencleanelectric.com/

energy wind products
100,000 Stores. Deals. Reviews. energy wind products& More.
shopping.yahoo.com

tags:  wind energy
 
sponsors
Water As Fuel
Video Of This Controversial Fuel Saving Technique Using Hydrogen.
www.Fuel-Rebel.com

Save $354.96/Year…
Cut your electricity bill by reducing standby power usage.
JLRyan.com

wind energy
Reduce Your Electric Consumption& Utility Costs. Call for Info.
www.greencleanelectric.com/

other presidential cabinet news

US, Czech Republic sign defense agreement

The United States and leaders of the Czech Republic agreed Tuesday to place a radar system in this former Soviet satellite that would warn of long-range missiles coming to Europe from the Middle...

Started in presidential cabinet news • 1 response • Last response by  • 3 hours ago
Tags: rice missile defense, us, agreement, czech
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, left, smiles as she meets with Czech Republic's Minister of Foreign Affairs Karel Schwarzenberg, upon her arrival at the Cernin's Palace in Prague, Czech Republic, Tuesday, July 8, 2008. Rice is to Prague to sign a preliminary missile defense treaty.  (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)
General says Iraqi security forces still need help

U.S. aid for Iraq's army and police units will be needed for the foreseeable future, although the security forces are becoming increasingly independent, a senior general will tell Congress on...

Started in presidential cabinet news • 6 hours ago • 0 responses
Tags: united states, iraq
Schools should teach teens, tweens about abuse

Schools should educate teenagers _ and even children as young as 11 _ about abusive dating situations, say teen health and safety advocates and state attorneys general.

Started in presidential cabinet news • 12 hours ago • 0 responses
US chief: Iraq needs time to stabilize after fight

Even in the chin-high piles of roadside rubble, the crumbled cinderblock and the eerily empty streets of this neighborhood in western Mosul, America's top military officer sees hope. But he also sees...

Started in presidential cabinet news • 2 responses • Last response by yesah65 (0) • 1 hour ago
Tags: iraq, long slog, us
Report says some vets paying more for health care

Some military retirees disabled in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan pay more for health care than other retirees, and a new report recommends waiving their insurance premiums to correct the inequity.

Started in presidential cabinet news • 1 response • Last response by  • 10 hours ago
Tags: veterans, hewalth care, us
  privacy  •  terms  •  about myLot  •  legal  •  contact  •  FAQs  •  RSS  •  toolbar  •  guidelines  •  advertise  

©2008 myLot™. All Rights Reserved.